Mr. Clean said:
$25 billion is just the first go round (except of course for Chrysler). No one of the three is saying that there won't be further requests on the (very near) horizon.
The thread topic is whether the government should bailout the automakers. As a taxpayer, I don't want to loan money to an industry being run by the clueless and operated as anything other than a profit center. If this is a loan, then I want nothing less than at least a viable business plan whereby I can expect complete repayment of principal and interest.
LenA, you are not the first person to find yourself amongst the unemployed/underemployed. Others have found themselves "down-sized", "right-sized", "out sourced", "layed off" etc. and ad nauseum and never have I seen the amount "bail me and my company out" posts. Why do those in the auto industry seem to feel that they are entitled to their jobs more so than others?
On another note, it sounds like Bush has moved to increase unemployment benefits by an additional 7 weeks and top of the existing 13 week extension.
One) Damn right there had better be a detailed plan for viability. I'm still wondering why these corporate "leaders" didn't at least bring copies of what they already each told the press and their stockholders months and even YEARS ago, with a detailed explanation on where they were in their restructuring time line. Even Chrysler has had to release that information through Daimler, who still owns 18% of Chrysler and is, them selves, still publicly held. Christ, it would take me under four ours to find the information on the internet, and through my Automotive News account, and compile a better presentation than all four of them gave.
Two) Find me another industry that, as a whole, touches as many business, and as many communities, as the auto industry, especially because of the retail side of the busines (the dealers) being in every state of the country.
It's not a question of being entitled. It's a question of being the collateral damage of executive decisions that none of us had a hand in, most of us didn't agree with with, and watching the real culprits behind the piss poor decisions walk away with seven & eight figure incomes over multiple years, while the rest of us pay the price for their decisions.
That's what we are, not just me. The janitorial service employee who lost his job because a thirty year old dealership closed. The industrial supply distributor clerk downsized because another plant closed. The restaurant owner going out of business. The shopping mall with ever growing numbers of empty store fronts. Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago, Louisville, Atlanta, Janesville, Wilmington, Rochester - just a small sample.
Collateral damage. And what we get from a lot of people is condescension. It gets frustrating.
As to the unemployment, I read another thirteen weeks, not seven Three months.
My Way News - Bush signs jobless benefits extension Every little bit helps I guess.